Challenging Mayors to Help Make a Difference

In the last decade, the Maker Movement has burst to life, democratizing the tools and skills necessary to design and make just about anything. The Maker Movement has already changed the landscape of American manufacturing in small towns and big cities, offering a uniquely American path to revitalizing our manufacturing sector. This transformation has the potential to unleash new opportunities for entrepreneurs looking to make the next world-changing product, students interested in hands-on engagement with Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM), and companies hoping to manufacture their products with American workers passionate about the latest manufacturing technologies.

In advance of the first-ever White House Maker Faire, mayors around the country are signing up to join the Mayors Maker Challenge, a call to action from mayors, challenging their peers to bolster Making in their own communities. This week, over 20 “maker mayors” asked other local leaders to join them in spreading access to the tools, technologies, and education to spur Making and manufacturing innovation in big and small communities around the United States.

The Mayors Maker Challenge asks cities to build on this work by committing to action, including:

Convening a roundtable to spur local partnerships and catalyze public and private commitments to strengthen the local Maker Movement;

Committing to work with school districts, libraries, museums, after-school providers, community colleges and universities, workforce investment boards, and job training organizations to give more students access to access to maker spaces and mentorship, and focus more education and training programs on the emerging fields of advanced manufacturing and technology innovation;

Celebrating the ingenuity and creativity of local makers by holding a Maker Faire;

Designating a maker liaison in the mayor’s office or economic development department;

Upgrading economic & business development programs, incentives and services to provide support to manufacturing entrepreneurs and small businesses;

Identifying, documenting and sharing “promising practices” in manufacturing and technological innovation so that others in your community and beyond can learn from local experimentation; and

Supporting initiatives to engage students, maker entrepreneurs and small manufacturers in under-served neighborhoods.

If you’d like to join the Mayors Maker Challenge, or get your community involved, send us an email at maker@ostp.gov. To see if your mayor is already signed on, click here.

If you’re interested in the first-ever White House Maker Faire, you can send your creations, information, and descriptions of what you've made to us using this form.

Tom Kalil is Deputy Director for Technology and Innovation at the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, Jason Miller is Special Assistant to the President for Manufacturing Policy at the National Economic Council, and Rohan Patel is Special Assistant to the President and Deputy Director of Intergovernmental Affairs at The White House.